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What Was The Native American Name for Minnesota?

Daniel Conner
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Travel Map IconMINNESOTA - The name "Minnesota" is an English adaptation of the Dakota phrase Mni Sota Makoce. While often translated simply as "Sky-tinted Water," the name more accurately describes the way the region’s thousands of lakes reflect the shifting patterns of the clouds: Mni (water), Sota (clear but cloudy/sky-tinted), and Makoce (land).


What Was The Native American Name for Minnesota?
What Was The Native American Name for Minnesota?

Long before the current state borders were established, this region was a vibrant landscape inhabited primarily by the Dakota and the Anishinaabe (Ojibwe/Chippewa). For these nations, the land was a network of sacred waterways, wild rice beds, and ancient forests.

The People of the Lakes and Woods

Minnesota’s geography transitions from the southern prairies to the deep pine forests of the north. This variety supported two distinct but often overlapping cultural worlds:



Regional and Cultural Designations

Indigenous groups identified the landscape through its physical character and the gifts it provided:

Significant Indigenous Place Names

The linguistic legacy of the Dakota and Anishinaabe is embedded in nearly every corner of the state. Minneapolis is a linguistic hybrid, combining the Dakota Mni (water) with the Greek polis (city). The city’s famous Bde Maka Ska (White Earth Lake) recently had its original Dakota name restored, replacing the colonial name Lake Calhoun.



The city of Bemidji is named after the Anishinaabe Chief Binay-zhee, and the name itself refers to a lake with a river flowing through it. Mankato is a slight misspelling of the Dakota word Mahkato, meaning "Blue Earth." Even the St. Croix River was known to the Ojibwe as Gichi-ziibi, while the Twin Cities area is recognized by the Dakota as the site of Oheyawahi (a sacred hill for viewing burials and the landscape).

A Living Sovereign Presence

Today, Minnesota is home to eleven federally recognized tribes: seven Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) bands and four Dakota communities. These nations are leaders in environmental protection—particularly in the preservation of wild rice habitats—and continue to revitalize their languages through immersion schools and community programs.


By recognizing the origin of Mni Sota Makoce, we acknowledge that Minnesota’s identity is not just about the "10,000 lakes," but about a sacred relationship with the water and the sky that has been maintained by the Dakota and Anishinaabe for countless generations.